Cancer surveillance series: Interpreting trends in prostate cancer - Part III: Quantifying the link between population prostate-specific antigen testing and recent declines in prostate cancer mortality
R. Etzioni et al., Cancer surveillance series: Interpreting trends in prostate cancer - Part III: Quantifying the link between population prostate-specific antigen testing and recent declines in prostate cancer mortality, J NAT CANC, 91(12), 1999, pp. 1033-1039
Background: The objective of this study was to investigate the circumstance
s under which dissemination of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing, beg
inning in 1988, could plausibly explain the declines in prostate cancer mor
tality observed from 1992 through 1994. Methods: We developed a computer si
mulation model by use of information on population-based PSA testing patter
ns, cancer detection rates, average lead time (the time by which diagnosis
is advanced by screening), and projected decreased risk of death associated
with early diagnosis of prostate cancer through PSA testing. The model pro
vides estimates of the number of deaths prevented by PSA testing for the 7-
year period from 1988 through 1994 and projects what prostate cancer mortal
ity for these years would have been in the absence of PSA testing, Results:
Results were generated by assuming a level of screening efficacy similar t
o that hypothesized for the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian (PLCO)
Cancer Screening Trial. Under this assumption, the projected mortality in t
he absence of PSA testing continued the increasing trend observed before 19
91 only when it was assumed that the mean lead time was 3 years or less. Pr
ojected mortality trends in the absence of PSA screening were not consisten
t with pre-1991 increasing trends for lead times of 5 gears and 7 years, Co
nclusions: When screening is assumed to be at least as efficacious as hypot
hesized in the PLCO trial, it is unlikely that the entire decline in prosta
te cancer mortality can be explained by PSA testing based on current belief
s concerning lead time. Only very short lead times would produce a decline
in mortality of the magnitude that has been observed.